The House: Balance The Budget, Obama

The "Require Presidential Leadership and No Deficit Act" is meant to require that president submit a budget that balances the government's books. It passed by a 253-167 vote, with 26 Democrats joining with majority Republicans behind the bill.

The legislation is aimed at drawing a contrast between Obama and House Republicans, who recently announced that their upcoming budget blueprint would come to balance within a decade. That's a shift from the past two years, when Republican budgets contained sharp cuts but failed to project a balanced ledger.

The bill's author, Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga., said it "simply says to the president, `Mr. President, when you submit your budget, just let us know when it balances."'

During the debate, Republicans pointed out the four consecutive years of trillion dollar-plus deficits occurred on Obama's watch and that he has once again failed to meet the legal deadline for submitting his budget to Congress. Obama's budget was supposed to have been delivered on Monday but isn't expected until next month.

"Every year the president has been in office, there have been deficits of $1 trillion -- adding $6 trillion to the debt," said GOP Whip Kevin McCarthy of California. "Out of the last five budgets, four of them have been late."

The narrative gripping Washington this week is that House Republicans want the sequester to go into effect.

But thereâs at least one man in the House Republican Conference who seems to think thatâs an epically bad idea: Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio).

âLet me make clear: I donât like the sequester,â Boehner said at his weekly news conference in the Capitol. âI think itâs taking a meat ax to our government, a meat ax to many programs and it will weaken our national defense. Thatâs why I fought to not have the sequester in the first place. But the president didnât want to have to deal with the debt limit again before his reelection.â

The narrative gripping Washington this week is that House Republicans want the sequester to go into effect.

But thereâs at least one man in the House Republican Conference who seems to think thatâs an epically bad idea: Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio).

âLet me make clear: I donât like the sequester,â Boehner said at his weekly news conference in the Capitol. âI think itâs taking a meat ax to our government, a meat ax to many programs and it will weaken our national defense. Thatâs why I fought to not have the sequester in the first place. But the president didnât want to have to deal with the debt limit again before his reelection.â

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Sequestration is only 120 billion a year and the leader of The House doesn't support it .How can they be serious about a trillion dollar a year deficit if they are against a 120 billion a year in cuts